notes/node_modules/specificity
Patrick Marsceill b7b0d0d7bf
Initial commit
2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
..
bin Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
test Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
.npmignore Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
package.json Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
readme.md Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00
specificity.js Initial commit 2017-03-09 13:16:08 -05:00

readme.md

Specificity Calculator

A JavaScript module for calculating and comparing the specificity of CSS selectors. The module is used on the Specificity Calculator website.

Specificity Calculator is built for CSS Selectors Level 3. Specificity Calculator isnt a CSS validator. If you enter invalid selectors it will return incorrect results. For example, the negation pseudo-class may only take a simple selector as an argument. Using a psuedo-element or combinator as an argument for :not() is invalid CSS3 so Specificity Calculator will return incorrect results.

Front-end usage

SPECIFICITY.calculate('ul#nav li.active a');   // [{ specificity: '0,1,1,3' }]

Node.js usage

var specificity = require('specificity');
specificity.calculate('ul#nav li.active a');   // [{ specificity: '0,1,1,3' }]

Passing in multiple selectors

You can use comma separation to pass in multiple selectors:

SPECIFICITY.calculate('ul#nav li.active a, body.ie7 .col_3 h2 ~ h2');   // [{ specificity: '0,1,1,3' }, { specificity: '0,0,2,3' }]

Return values

The specificity.calculate function returns an array containing a result object for each selector input. Each result object has the following properties:

  • selector: the input
  • specificity: the result as a string e.g. 0,1,0,0
  • specificityArray: the result as an array of numbers e.g. [0, 1, 0, 0]
  • parts: array with details about each part of the selector that counts towards the specificity

Example

var specificity = require('../'),
    result = specificity.calculate('ul#nav li.active a');

console.log(result);

/* result =
[ {
    selector: 'ul#nav li.active a',
    specificity: '0,1,1,3',
    specificityArray: [0, 1, 1, 3],
    parts: [
      { selector: 'ul', type: 'c', index: 0, length: 2 },
      { selector: '#nav', type: 'a', index: 2, length: 4 },
      { selector: 'li', type: 'c', index: 5, length: 2 },
      { selector: '.active', type: 'b', index: 8, length: 7 },
      { selector: 'a', type: 'c', index: 13, length: 1 }
    ]
} ]
*/

Comparing two selectors

Specificity Calculator also exposes a compare function. This function accepts two CSS selectors or specificity arrays, a and b.

  • It returns -1 if a has a lower specificity than b
  • It returns 1 if a has a higher specificity than b
  • It returns 0 if a has the same specificity than b
SPECIFICITY.compare('div', '.active');         // -1
SPECIFICITY.compare('#main', 'div');           // 1
SPECIFICITY.compare('span', 'div');            // 0
SPECIFICITY.compare('span', [0,0,0,1]);        // 0
SPECIFICITY.compare('#main > div', [0,1,0,1]); // 0

Ordering an array of selectors by specificity

You can pass the SPECIFICITY.compare function to Array.prototype.sort to sort an array of CSS selectors by specificity.

['#main', 'p', '.active'].sort(SPECIFICITY.compare);   // ['p', '.active', '#main']

Command-line usage

Run npm install specificity to install the module locally, or npm install -g specificity for global installation. You may need to elevate permissions by sudo for the latter. Run specificity without arguments to learn about its usage:

$ specificity
Usage: specificity <selector>
Computes specificity of a CSS selector.

Pass a selector as the first argument to get its specificity computed:

$ specificity "ul#nav li.active a"
0,1,1,3

Testing

To install dependencies, run: npm install

Then to test, run: npm test